wait-for-it
opentelemetry-collector-contrib
wait-for-it | opentelemetry-collector-contrib | |
---|---|---|
16 | 44 | |
9,008 | 2,567 | |
- | 4.0% | |
0.0 | 10.0 | |
over 1 year ago | 5 days ago | |
Python | Go | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
wait-for-it
- How to dockerize Node + Prisma
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Docker Compose: how to wait for the MySQL server container to be ready?
python:3.10.5-slim-buster is a Debian GNU/Linux 10 (buster). Follow the Debian package link given by wait-for-it, we'll eventually find this link https://packages.debian.org/source/oldoldstable/wait-for-it, I downloaded the wait-for-it_0.0~git20160501.orig.tar.gz file and extracted wait-for-it.sh out to the project root directory where setup.py, app.py, .dockerignore, Dockerfile and docker-compose.yml are.
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Docker compose nodejs mysql network doesnt wait for health checks
Using countless variations of the wait for it script (they all get ignored (yes i did chmod +x)). another candidate or using it like this
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How to disable nginx DNS check?
I haven’t done it, but maybe you can use something like this in an ExecStartPre on the nginx systemd service, or if that doesnt work, as a separate service that nginx’s systemd service starts after
- As of 2021, what are the best practices deploying a Apache/PHP/Postgres project with Docker?
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Podman: A tool for managing OCI containers and pods
I’ve used wait-for-it with success.
https://github.com/vishnubob/wait-for-it
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How to deploy postgres db with go in docker-compose?
When start to build docker-compose, it tried to connect db first, but it seems that db didn't become reachable yet. Even added wait-for-it doesn't work.
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5/28 TIL: Docker Compose, Volumes, cURL
executes 'wait-for-it.sh' to wait on the availability of port 3306 before running 'air'--using wait-for-it.sh is just an example and this shell script has to be installed as part of the Dockerfilehttps://github.com/vishnubob/wait-for-it
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Compose service that depends on a service from another compose
Yeah dockerize seems to achieve your second suggestion, someone also suggested my wait-for-it https://github.com/vishnubob/wait-for-it which seems to be similar but a bit more popular and also used in the official documentation https://docs.docker.com/compose/startup-order/ I think I'll go this route, the first option doesn't quite match what I need as all compose aren't necessarily to be started simultaneously.
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How to make Django fail if it cannot connect to Redis?
Can't you use something like this? : https://github.com/vishnubob/wait-for-it . Essentially wait until you can ping redis port and then run wsgi runserver for django. However, are you sure that you can resolve redis host on swarm? Redis starts so fast that it makes me think it might be something else.
opentelemetry-collector-contrib
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Ask HN: How to do dead simple heartbeat monitoring?
you can add https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-co... at signoz's otel-collector which will scrape your service's endpoint periodically. If your service is down, this will give 5xx error and you can set an alert on that.
Another alternative is to use an alert to notify on a metric being absent for sometime. Both of these should work
- OpenTelemetry at Scale: what buffer we can use at the behind to buffer the data?
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All you need is Wide Events, not "Metrics, Logs and Traces"
The open telemetry collector does just that. https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-co...
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OpenTelemetry Collector Anti-Patterns
There are two official distributions of the OpenTelemetry Collector: Core, and Contrib.
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OpenTelemetry Journey #00 - Introduction to OpenTelemetry
Maybe, you are asking yourself: "But I already had instrumented my applications with vendor-specific libraries and I'm using their agents and monitoring tools, why should I change to OpenTelemetry?". The answer is: maybe you're right and I don't want to encourage you to update the way how you are doing observability in your applications, that's a hard and complex task. But, if you are starting from scratch or you are not happy with your current observability infrastructure, OpenTelemetry is the best choice, independently of the backend telemetry tool that you are using. I would like to invite you to take a look at the number of exporters available in the collector contrib section, if your backend tracing tool is not there, probably it's already using the Open Telemetry Protocol (OTLP) and you will be able to use the core collector. Otherwise, you should consider changing your backend telemetry tool or contributing to the project creating a new exporter.
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Building an Observability Stack with Docker
To receive OTLP data, you set up the standard otlp receiver to receive data in HTTP or gRPC format. To forward traces and metrics, a batch processor was defined to accumulate data and send it every 100 milliseconds. Then set up a connection to Tempo (in otlp/tempo exporter, with a standard top exporter) and to Prometheus (in prometheus exporter, with a control exporter). A debug exporter also was added to log info on container standard I/O and see how the collector is working.
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Spotlight: Sentry for Development
Thanks for the reply. Would the Spotlight sidecar possibly be able to run independently and consume spans emitted by the Sentry exporter[0] or some other similar flow beyond strictly exporting directly from the Sentry SDK provided by Spotlight?
This tooling looks really cool and I'd love to play around with it, but am already pretty entrenched into OTel and funneling data through the collector and don't want to introduce too much additional overhead for devs.
[0] https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-co...
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Amazon EKS Monitoring with OpenTelemetry [Step By Step Guide]
A list of all metric definitions can be found here.
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Spring Boot Monitoring with Open-Source Tools
receivers: otlp: protocols: grpc: endpoint: 0.0.0.0:4317 http: endpoint: 0.0.0.0:4318 hostmetrics: collection_interval: 60s scrapers: cpu: {} disk: {} load: {} filesystem: {} memory: {} network: {} paging: {} process: mute_process_name_error: true mute_process_exe_error: true mute_process_io_error: true processes: {} prometheus: config: global: scrape_interval: 60s scrape_configs: - job_name: otel-collector-binary scrape_interval: 60s static_configs: - targets: ["localhost:8889>"] - job_name: "jvm-metrics" scrape_interval: 10s metrics_path: "/actuator/prometheus" static_configs: - targets: ["localhost:8090>"] processors: batch: send_batch_size: 1000 timeout: 10s # Ref: https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-contrib/blob/main/processor/resourcedetectionprocessor/README.md resourcedetection: detectors: [env, system] # Before system detector, include ec2 for AWS, gcp for GCP and azure for Azure. # Using OTEL_RESOURCE_ATTRIBUTES envvar, env detector adds custom labels. timeout: 2s system: hostname_sources: [os] # alternatively, use [dns,os] for setting FQDN as host.name and os as fallback extensions: health_check: {} zpages: {} exporters: otlp: endpoint: "ingest.{region}.signoz.cloud:443" tls: insecure: false headers: "signoz-access-token": logging: verbosity: normal service: telemetry: metrics: address: 0.0.0.0:8888 extensions: [health_check, zpages] pipelines: metrics: receivers: [otlp] processors: [batch] exporters: [otlp] metrics/internal: receivers: [prometheus, hostmetrics] processors: [resourcedetection, batch] exporters: [otlp] traces: receivers: [otlp] processors: [batch] exporters: [otlp] logs: receivers: [otlp] processors: [batch] exporters: [otlp]
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Migrating to OpenTelemetry
If you are using the prometheus exporter, you can use the transform processor to get specific resource attributes into metric labels.
With the advantage that you get only the specific attributes you want, thus avoiding a cardinality explosion.
https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector-co...
What are some alternatives?
podman-compose - a script to run docker-compose.yml using podman
uptrace - Open source APM: OpenTelemetry traces, metrics, and logs
nerdctl - contaiNERD CTL - Docker-compatible CLI for containerd, with support for Compose, Rootless, eStargz, OCIcrypt, IPFS, ...
cockpit-podman - Cockpit UI for podman containers
docker-php-nginx - Docker image with PHP-FPM 8.3 & Nginx 1.24 on Alpine Linux
signoz - SigNoz is an open-source observability platform native to OpenTelemetry with logs, traces and metrics in a single application. An open-source alternative to DataDog, NewRelic, etc. 🔥 🖥. 👉 Open source Application Performance Monitoring (APM) & Observability tool
podman - Podman: A tool for managing OCI containers and pods.
gitlab-runner
traefik - The Cloud Native Application Proxy
cookiecutter-django - Cookiecutter Django is a framework for jumpstarting production-ready Django projects quickly. [Moved to: https://github.com/cookiecutter/cookiecutter-django]